Marcus Williams files for U.S. Senate
Submitted by scharrison on Tue, 02/09/2010 - 1:17pmWell, at least he's consistent:
Marcus Williams filed as a Democrat in the US Senate race. He actually really surprised some folks and got 13% in the primary two years ago, coming within five points of the much more heralded Jim Neal. I don't think he's a serious threat to win the nomination but he could have some impact on the race.
That 13% was 170,865 votes...
Puppetshow punks
Submitted by James on Tue, 02/09/2010 - 9:15am
Chris Fitzsimon reminds us today that no matter how much money the Puppetmaster spends to put on his show, the serious work of governing is for adults, not three-year-olds.
- Pope and Luddy may be able to buy an election but their money can't change reality. The more the plans of their Gang of Five are scrutinized, the more absurd they seem. Hogwash doesn't begin to describe it.
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Malone files for NC Senate today
Submitted by cjmalone on Tue, 02/09/2010 - 12:03amIt was a good feeling to finally make the past several months of campaigning official by filing today for the NC Senate, Dist. 15, at the Wake County Board of Elections.
The Republicans were there in force, but I had Democratic Party company after a while. At this point, I am the only Democrat running for the party nomination, but I won't know for sure if I will be the nominee by virtue of being unopposed until filing ends on February 26. I may make it and it would save money and time to be able to focus soley on beating the incumbent, Rep. Neal Hunt, in November. Yet, a qualified Democrat has a perfect right to run and who am I to begrudge democracy running its course? What will be, will be.
Who wins this one will make a big difference in how the people are represented. It is up to the people to say no to the Republicans, who now lick their chops with the expectation of taking of control of the Senate and House in NC.
Three-year-olds running Wake County Schools
Submitted by James on Mon, 02/08/2010 - 5:53pmWhat happens when Republicans run things? Squandered resources. Chaos for parents. Imminent tax increases. All hell breaks loose.
Hat tip to Progressive Pulse.
Virginia ga-ga over offshore drilling
Submitted by scharrison on Mon, 02/08/2010 - 2:30pmIncluding its two Democratic Senators:
Virginia could become the first state on the Eastern Seaboard to open its coast to energy exploration since a decades-old federal drilling ban expired more than a year ago.
The new Republican governor, Robert McDonnell, pledged to make Virginia the "energy capital of the East Coast" at his swearing-in last month. The state's Democratic senators, Jim Webb and Mark R. Warner, are also urging the Obama administration to begin selling leases next year for drilling 50 miles offshore.
Burr is unreliable on coal ash regulation
Submitted by ncsierraclub on Mon, 02/08/2010 - 12:33pmLast December Senator Richard Burr co-signed a letter to the EPA requesting that they not designate coal ash as a hazardous waste material. The letter expressed that the costs of the reform would be a burden on utility companies and eventually the average consumer. The Senator seems to be ignoring the blatant dangers associated with coal ash ponds.
Candlestick: Free money for non profits
Submitted by James on Mon, 02/08/2010 - 10:11am
A quick update on our first week of Candlestick, where the NC Sierra Club leads the pack on grant-gathering with their disciplined cross-posting. The top Sierra Club post garnered 286 reads. Planned Parenthood also earned grants last week with their welcome coverage of the threats to women's freedom in Apex. Their top post had more than 400 reads. For those non-profits who may have missed the Candlestick announcement, the details are posted again below.
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Bankrupt senior citizens, brought to you by Republican privateers
Submitted by James on Mon, 02/08/2010 - 9:50amCourts today are seeing an epidemic of bankruptcies among older adults, a direct result of eight years of Republican profligacy and disdain for the middle class. Richard Burr and Virginia Foxx think "the cure" is to keep on doing what George Bush did.
The average age for filing bankruptcy has increased, and the rate of bankruptcy filings among those ages sixty-five and older has more than doubled since 1991. The implications of a sharp rise in the proportion of older Americans in bankruptcy are particularly problematic because, unlike their younger counterparts, older Americans typically have fewer years left in the full-time workforce. Consequently, they will have a far more difficult time recovering from financial collapse.
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Andrew Brock wants to have a "tangible impact"
Submitted by Blue NC on Mon, 02/08/2010 - 9:01amA Davie County Republican is urging fellow state lawmakers to stop wasting time and money on the state’s climate change commission and support energy policy he says will have a tangible impact on the state. Brock also wants to look into building a refinery in eastern North Carolina to jumpstart economic development in distressed counties.
Open thread
Submitted by Blue NC on Mon, 02/08/2010 - 8:42am
The human brain, for all its power, is suspicious of difficulty. Effective marketers, politicians, and sales people all know to keep it simple.
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Sarah and the Tea Partiers
Submitted by Dan Besse on Sun, 02/07/2010 - 12:50pmWhat is it about Sarah Palin that so appeals to the fringe right in America?
Listening to her keynote address to the national Tea Party convention on Saturday, the answer seems blindingly obvious. She's everything the right wing loves in a leader: A cheerful simpleton, unencumbered by objective reality, telling them with ringing conviction exactly what they want to hear.
Details are unimportant and largely undesired. Statistics are for liars. Anything that contradicts what Everyone Knows is of course just manufactured evidence from crooks, idiots, and socialists.
Dem majority in NC House vulnerable, too?
Submitted by scharrison on Sun, 02/07/2010 - 12:46pmSome startling (if true) political realities:
The GOP needs nine seats for control in the 120-member House. Minority Leader Paul Stam of Raleigh says among the Democratic seats he's targeting, 14 are in districts carried last year by Republican John McCain.
Last month Raleigh-based Public Policy Polling found voters split. A slight majority favored Republican legislative candidates. But independents, a crucial swing vote, preferred the GOP 45 percent to 23 percent.
The party of three-year-olds
Submitted by James on Sun, 02/07/2010 - 9:29am
When Dr. Jack Block, who died this week, reported his remarkable findings about personality and politics in 2006, Republicans were aghast. Block discovered that modern adult conservatives grow from inhibited, rigid and thin-skinned three year olds.
That nursery-school mentality in today's GOP came into sharp focus last week when Burr voted with every Republican in the Senate against backing the full faith and credit of the US Treasury.
Tonight on BlueNC Radio: Sam Spencer, NC Farm Team
Submitted by James on Sun, 02/07/2010 - 8:47am
With the electoral outlook in the NC Senate sketchier than ever, it's clear that whatever small faith progressives have in Democratic Party leadership has been wildly misplaced. Incumbents are bailing in droves, with as many as ten seats in play - in a year where redistricting will be the next new thing. That's why we've invited Sam Spencer, founder of NC Farm Team, to join us tonight on BlueNC Radio. The Farm Team is all about the long war, identifying and cultivating young progressives who can lead a new generation of progress here in North Carolina. For background information, here's a listing of all the coverage of the Farm Team at BlueNC.
Update: Here's the show!
The truth about history
Submitted by scharrison on Sat, 02/06/2010 - 11:31amStarNews has a great editorial on the recent flap over revisions to NC's History curriculum:
Tenth-graders would be immersed in study of the Founders, the Constitution and other important events and documents from the nation's formative years, much as they are now. The Civil War, which tore the nation apart and then brought it back together, wouldn't be forgotten, they say. It would be covered as part of a broad course in the seventh grade. Both courses would require students to think critically, analyze and draw conclusions based on the facts they learn.

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